House GOP Force Showdown Vote On Debt Ceiling

Last week, Democrats in the Senate forced Republicans to vote on a House GOP proposal that would make controversial changes to Medicare. On Tuesday, the Republicans who run the House are forcing Democrats to vote on raising the debt ceiling without addressing the deficit spending that drove up the debt.

That vote, too, is bound to fail — which is precisely what Republicans want.

When House GOP leaders scheduled Tuesday's vote simply to raise the debt ceiling by another $2.4 trillion, they knew that the entire House Republican caucus would be trooping to the White House on Wednesday to meet with President Obama.

Texas Republican Jeb Hensarling, chairman of the House Republican Conference, says Tuesday's vote will show that Congress won't raise the debt ceiling without cutting more spending.

"It's an important vote to have to show the president that is not where Congress is, it's not where the American people are," he says.

Nonsense, says Oregon House Democrat Peter DeFazio. "It's purely a political artifice so they can say, 'Look, everybody's against it,' so now this strengthens their hand. In my position, I'm saying until these guys get serious about the debt and the deficit — which means you have to talk both about cutting, and you have to talk about revenues — then this is all just a charade."

"It will not be an adult moment on the floor of the House of Representatives," adds Steny Hoyer, the No. 2 House Democrat, speaking of Tuesday's vote. He recalled that House Speaker John Boehner had earlier promised that voting on the debt ceiling would be the first really big adult moment for the new GOP House majority.

"To put something on the floor for the purposes of seeing it fail is a demonstration of the fact that this is simply a political charade," Hoyer says.

He urged Democrats to vote either "no" or "present." But Republicans point out that 114 House Democrats signed a letter last month demanding that any bill raising the debt ceiling have no strings attached.

"So I don't quite understand how they can now be protesting us holding a vote on what they asked us to hold a vote on," Hensarling says.

Rutgers University congressional expert Ross Baker says many bills that are introduced "really have nothing more to do than to embarrass the opposition."